Sit-Up Mistakes to Avoid
Pulling on your neck with your hands — this strains the cervical spine and doesn't help the rep. Keep hands across chest or lightly touching ears.
Using momentum to swing up — reduces core activation and increases lower back stress. Curl up slowly and deliberately.
Anchoring feet and using hip flexors to pull yourself up — this shifts work away from the abs. Focus on curling through the spine, not hinging at the hips.
Going too fast with too many reps — high-rep ballistic sit-ups stress the lumbar spine. Use controlled reps and consider safer alternatives like crunches or dead bugs.
Sit-Up Muscles Worked
The sit-up targets the rectus abdominis (the 'six-pack' muscle) and the hip flexors. Because the movement involves full spinal flexion plus hip flexion, the hip flexors often do more work than the abs, especially when feet are anchored.
Sit-Up FAQ
Are sit-ups bad for your back?
Repeated spinal flexion under load can stress the lumbar discs over time, especially with high reps or added speed. If you have back issues, safer alternatives like dead bugs, planks, or Pallof presses train the core without this risk.
Will sit-ups give me a six-pack?
Sit-ups strengthen the rectus abdominis but visible abs come from low body fat, not from any single exercise. A caloric deficit plus consistent training is what reveals a six-pack.
How many sit-ups should I do a day?
There's no magic number. 2-3 sets of 12-20 reps, 2-3 times per week is sufficient for core development. Daily high-rep sit-ups are unnecessary and can strain the lower back. Prioritize quality over quantity.
What's the difference between a sit-up and a crunch?
A crunch only lifts the shoulder blades off the floor (partial spinal flexion). A sit-up brings the entire torso upright (full spinal flexion plus hip flexion). Crunches isolate the abs better with less hip flexor involvement.